=head1 NAME
perlfaq7 - General Perl Language Issues
=head1 DESCRIPTION
This section deals with general Perl language issues that don't
clearly fit into any of the other sections.
=head2 Can I get a BNF/yacc/RE for the Perl language?
There is no BNF, but you can paw your way through the yacc grammar in
perly.y in the source distribution if you're particularly brave. The
grammar relies on very smart tokenizing code, so be prepared to
venture into toke.c as well.
In the words of Chaim Frenkel: "Perl's grammar can not be reduced to BNF.
The work of parsing perl is distributed between yacc, the lexer, smoke
and mirrors."
=head2 What are all these $@%&* punctuation signs, and how do I know when to use them?
They are type specifiers, as detailed in L:
$ for scalar values (number, string or reference)
@ for arrays
% for hashes (associative arrays)
& for subroutines (aka functions, procedures, methods)
* for all types of that symbol name. In version 4 you used them like
pointers, but in modern perls you can just use references.
There are couple of other symbols that you're likely to encounter that aren't
really type specifiers:
<> are used for inputting a record from a filehandle.
\ takes a reference to something.
Note that is I the type specifier for files
nor the name of the handle. It is the C<< <> >> operator applied
to the handle FILE. It reads one line (well, record--see
L>) from the handle FILE in scalar context, or I lines
in list context. When performing open, close, or any other operation
besides C<< <> >> on files, or even when talking about the handle, do
I use the brackets. These are correct: C, C and "copying from STDIN to FILE".
=head2 Do I always/never have to quote my strings or use semicolons and commas?
Normally, a bareword doesn't need to be quoted, but in most cases
probably should be (and must be under C